The Complete Decca Reordings of AtaAolfo Argenta, 1953-1957
Facts
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The Complete Decca Reordings of Ataúlfo Argenta, 1953-1957
Music Price: You save 38%! As of Aug 30 0:09 EDT (details)
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| Studio | Decca |
| Release Date | January 9, 2007 |
| UPC Code | 028947577478 |
| Buy this item | $24.97 at Amazon.com As of Aug 30 0:09 EDT (details) 5 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Box set |
Tracks
Disc 1- Espana
- I Alborada
- II Variazioni
- III Alborada
- IV Scena E Canto Gitano
- V Fandango Asturiano
- Mi Mineur
- No. 1 In C Major
- No. 2 In G Minor
- No. 3 In A Major
- No. 4 In B Flat Major
- No. 5 In D Major
- I Gigues
- II Iberia: Par Les Rues Et Par Les Chemins
- III Rondes De Printemps
- Allegro Maestoso
- Quasi Adagio - Julius Katchen
- Allegretto Vivace - Julius Katchen
- Allegro Marziale Animato - Julius Katchen
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In A Major - Julius Katchen
- Allegro Moderato - - Julius Katchen
- Allego Deciso - Marziale Un Poco Meno Allegro - - Julius Katchen
- Allegro Animato - Julius Katchen
- Evocation
- El Corpus En Sevilla
- Triana
- El Puerto
- El Albaicin
- I Reveries - Passions: Largo - Allegro Agitato Ed Appassionato Assai
- II Un Bal: Valse: Allegro Non Troppo
- III Scene Aux Champs: Adagio
- IV Marche Au Supplice: Allegretto Non Troppo
- V Songe D'une Nuit Du Sabbat: Larghetto - Allegro - Ronde Du Sabbat: Poco Meno Mosso
- I Exaltacion
- II Ensueno
- III Orgia
- Les Preludes
- Faust
- Gretchen
- Mephistopheles
- I Allegro Moderato
- II Canzonetta: Andante
- III Allegro Vivacissimo
- I Andante Sostenuto - Moderato Con Anima
- II Andantino In Modo Di Canzona
- III Scherzo: Pizzicato Ostinato
- IV Finale: Allegro Con Fuoco
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Not as complete... |
Maybe this set should have been titled "The Complete DECCA recordings cleared for reissue." September 5, 2007
| Five Stars for the Spanish Stuff |
However; in Spanish music Argenta was excellent and, at times, tremendous; better than Frubeck de Burgos, who is otherwise a more well-rounded conductor. Argenta had a striking gift for conveying both the passion and the structure of his native music. Argenta recorded several works in Spain, issued on Lp, but today difficult to locate on CD. The Spanish selections on this Decca set showcase just how good he could be in music from the Iberian peninsula. Of particular note is his performance of the Debussy,- very few conductors bring such a nice balance of color and rousing energy to these pieces, especially the concluding Ronde de printemps. The recent Boulez may be more sophisticated but the fifty year old sound is quite impressive!
As for the price - at nearly 40 dollars this set is quite ridiculous. On sale, at 24.95, it seems worth considering; especially if you are a fan of Spanish orchestra music. Argenta has some stiff competition, especially Reiner and Dorati's famous performances of Iberia, and Paray, too, now that I think about it. But it seems to me he holds his own with those legendary performances. If you decide to buy this CD you will be paying a premium to hear one of the last century's premiere conductors of Spanish music. The remainder of the CD varies from good to disappointing and, here and there, borderline dross.
Buying CDs you will never play to hear excellent ones is up to you - but it seems unlikely the Spanish pieces will be issued separately - though the CD Gods have shown themselves to be fickle indeed.
As Spencer Tracy said about Kate Hepburn, 'there's not much meat on her bones, but what's there is is choice.' May 2, 2007
| A lost talent given a fine memorial |
CD 2 begins with energetic, even brash readings of the two Liszt Pinao Concertos with Julius Katchen that are all but unlistenable because of the boomy, hollow, clattery sound given to the piano and the buzzy strings in the orchestra; God knows how Decca everr released these. Junky recordings of junky pieces. However, what follows is a delightful, idiomatic Iberia by Albeniz (orchestrated from the piano suite) that I've never heard. The Paris Conservatoire Orch. is in its element here, sounding at once exotic and dandyish. Argenta's phrasing couldn't be improved upon.
CD 3 gives us a Symphonie fantastique from the same orchestra that's French in all the wrong ways: wobbly horns, indifferent execution, and not much involvement from Argenta, either. Then Argenta returns to strength with Turina's alluring Danzas fantasticas, again with the Conservatoire forces, in a swinging, slam-bang reading.
CD 4 is devoted to Liszt's Les Preludes and Faust Symphony. EMI did Argenta no favors by trumpeting him as a Great Condcutor of the Century, hwere I first encountered this Faust Symphony with the Conservatoire orchestra sounding scrawny (but nicely spooky) and Argenta funning a decided second-best to Beecham from that era. The Suisse Romande orchestra, then in its heyday under Ernest Ansermet, play much better in Les Preludes, which gets a rousing, thoroughly enjoyable reading from Argenta.
CD 5 brings the acid test. If Argenta's name is to survive as more than a Spanish local colorist, surely he can do Tchaikovsky. Here we get the violini concerto with Campoli, a Decca star in early stereo, and the Sym. #4. Well, Campoli is soupy but incrdibly well recorded in the concerto; this is Moscow on the Tiber. The symphony brings in the Suisse Romande orchestra again, sounding a bit shrill but also tangy and not at all bland. And bless Argenta, he conducts with interest and originality, mostly on the brisk side but never succumbing to routine. I'm glad he puts his best foot forward at the end in a reading that ranks among his best.
February 6, 2007
| Argenta Finally Stateside |
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